Xu Meng, Dick Jaimie T A, Ricciardi Anthony, Fang Miao, Zhang Canyu, Gu Dangen, Mu Xidong, Luo Du, Wei Hui, Hu Yinchang
Pearl River Fisheries Research Institute Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Key Laboratory of Tropical and Subtropical Fishery Resource Application and Cultivation Ministry of Agriculture Guangzhou China.
Institute for Global Food Security School of Biological Sciences Queen's University Belfast, MBC Belfast UK.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Nov 17;6(24):8777-8784. doi: 10.1002/ece3.2602. eCollection 2016 Dec.
Quantifying the per capita effects of invasive alien species is crucial for assessing their ecological impact. A major challenge to risk assessment of invasive species was to understand the factors that cause per capita effects to vary in different ecological contexts, particularly in a warming world. By conducting functional response experiments, we estimated the per capita effects (attack rate and maximum feeding rate) of an invasive herbivorous snail, , toward ten host plant species. We tested whether variation in these effects is related to plant nutritional and physical properties (total N and dry matter content (DMC)) and examined how increasing temperature can shift these relationships. We observed stronger per capita effects (i.e., higher attack rate and maximum feeding rate) by the snail on plants with higher total N, but no direct relationship was found with DMC. A significant interaction effect of total N and DMC on the attack rate indicated that DMC probably adjusted the feeding indirectly. Warmer temperatures reduced correlations between snail functional responses and host plant nutritional properties (total N) by increasing maximum feeding rate for plants of low nutrition, but there was no such effect on attack rates. However, given the nonreplacement design used in our study, the nonsignificant effect of temperature on the attack rate should be caveated. Our result suggests that characterizing the per capita effects of herbivores using functional responses can reveal the mechanisms by which climate change may alter herbivore-plant interactions and, thus, the ecological impacts of introduced herbivores.
量化外来入侵物种的人均影响对于评估其生态影响至关重要。入侵物种风险评估的一个主要挑战是了解导致人均影响在不同生态环境中变化的因素,尤其是在气候变暖的世界中。通过进行功能反应实验,我们估计了一种入侵食草蜗牛对十种寄主植物物种的人均影响(攻击率和最大摄食率)。我们测试了这些影响的变化是否与植物的营养和物理特性(总氮和干物质含量(DMC))有关,并研究了温度升高如何改变这些关系。我们观察到蜗牛对总氮含量较高的植物具有更强的人均影响(即更高的攻击率和最大摄食率),但未发现与DMC有直接关系。总氮和DMC对攻击率有显著交互作用表明DMC可能间接调节了摄食。温度升高通过提高低营养植物的最大摄食率降低了蜗牛功能反应与寄主植物营养特性(总氮)之间的相关性,但对攻击率没有这种影响。然而,鉴于我们研究中使用的非替代设计,温度对攻击率的非显著影响应予以说明。我们的结果表明,利用功能反应来表征食草动物的人均影响可以揭示气候变化可能改变食草动物与植物相互作用的机制,从而揭示引入食草动物的生态影响。